'I did not have a plan B,' says board member who was ordered from the room, but returned to try to save colleagues

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Police say Clay Duke, a 56-year-old ex-convict, fatally shot himself. Duke was charged in October 1999 with aggravated stalking, shooting or throwing a missile into a building or vehicle and obstructing justice, according to state records.

PANAMA CITY, Fla. — A Florida school board member told Wednesday how she was ordered out of a meeting by an ex-convict armed with a gun, but returned to hit him with her purse in an attempt to save her colleagues.

In an incident that was caught on video, Ginger Littleton sneaked up behind the man and hit his right arm with her purse. She failed to dislodge the gun, and he turned it on her, but did not fire.

In an interview with TODAY, she said that she knew she could "walk away and try to live with myself" or take action and hope "the cavalry would come soon."

The gunman, Clay A. Duke, fired point-blank at school board members several times but, astonishingly, missed. One school board member said bullet holes could be seen just inches from where he had been.

A security guard arrived, the two men exchanged fire and Duke was wounded. He then fatally shot himself.

Duke, 56, appeared to be upset that his wife had been fired from a job with the district. Panama City Police Chief John Van Etten said Duke had been planning the shooting for some time and it was not a "spur of the moment" act.

Tuesday's date was circled on a calendar found in the trailer where Duke lived north of Panama City.

Bay District personnel director Tommye Lou Richardson says Rebecca Crowder-Duke was fired in February. The district hired her in September 2009 to teach students with special needs, but she didn't pass probation. Richardson says Crowder-Duke had questioned her termination but never filed a lawsuit. She couldn't specify why the woman was fired.

She was apparently living with her mother in a nearby town.

Crowder-Duke on Wednesday called her husband a "gentle giant."

"The economy and the world just got the better of him," she said in a rambling press conference.

Crowder-Duke said her husband was an excellent marksman who probably intentionally missed the five board members who were sitting just steps away.

"He didn't want any one to get hurt but himself," she said.

'That look in his eyes'At the board meeting, Clay Duke sat with the rest of the audience, listening to routine business.

But, as the board was in the midst of a discussion, he walked to the front of the room, spray painted a red "V" with a circle around it on the white wall — an apparent reference to the film "V for Vendetta" — then turned and waved the handgun.

He ordered everyone — including Littleton — to "hit the road," except for the men on the board, who were sitting behind a long beige desk.

Despite his shock, Bay City Schools Superintendent Bill Husfelt tried to persuade Duke to drop the gun. But the 56-year-old ex-convict just shook his head, blaming officials for his wife being fired.

Video showed him slowly raising the gun and leveling it at Husfelt, who pleaded, "Please don't, please don't."

"He had that look in his eyes," Husfelt told NBC's TODAY on Wednesday. "I've seen anger before, and he almost had like a grimace, a smile. He had planned to do this and we knew it wasn't going to end well.

"That guy had a mission; he'd already told us he was going to die, he told us he was going to kill himself basically, and he was going to try to do the same to us," he added.

Husfelt told Duke he would be responsible for Duke's wife's dismissal and said the board members should be allowed to leave.

"It was so surreal. You couldn't believe it was going on," Husfelt added.

Husfelt in the exchange on video tells Duke: "I've got a feeling you want the cops to come in and kill you because you said you are going to die today."

Duke shot twice at Husfelt from about 8 feet away and squeezed off several more rounds before security guard Mike Jones bolted in and, after exchanging gunfire with Duke, wounded him in the leg or side.

Duke then fatally shot himself, police Sgt. Jeff Becker said.

Somehow, no one else who remained in the small board room was injured in the clash that lasted several minutes.

Husfelt, speaking later at a press conference, said Jones' intervention had "saved our lives."

"That gentleman was not going to stop shooting," he said. "He only turned around after he was hit twice by Mike. He had more ammunition and he was going to keep going."

'Like ducks in a pond'
"My guys were lined up like ducks in a pond," Littleton told TODAY. "So I could either walk away and try to live with myself because I knew something bad was going to happen, or I could try to defend, delay, somehow or other divert, hoping that the cavalry would come soon.

"My guys had three-ring binders and pencils to protect themselves, so I whacked him with the purse, hoping I could get him to drop the gun. Obviously that didn't work. I did not have a Plan B."

Duke, a large, heavyset man dressed in a dark pullover coat, got angry and turned around as Littleton fell to the floor.

"God was standing in front of me and I will go to my grave believing that," he said.

'V for Vendetta' symbol
The V inside a circle that Duke painted is the same symbol used in the graphic novel series and movie "V for Vendetta," though police didn't talk about his motive.

On a Facebook page under Duke's name, which was apparently created Dec. 7, he left a cryptic message under the "About Me" section.

"My testament: Some people (the government sponsored media) will say I was evil, a monster (V) ... no ... I was just born poor in a country where the Wealthy manipulate, use, abuse, and economically enslave 95 percent of the population. Rich Republicans, Rich Democrats ... same-same ... rich ... they take turns fleecing us ... our few dollars ... pyramiding the wealth for themselves."

The Facebook profile also uses a quote billionaire Warren Buffett told the New York Times in 2006: "There's class warfare, all right, but it's my class, the rich class that's making war and we're winning."

Duke was charged in October 1999 with aggravated stalking, shooting or throwing a missile into a building or vehicle and obstructing justice, according to state records.

He was convicted and sentenced in January 2000 to five years in prison and was released in January 2004.

Records show Duke was a licensed massage therapist before his arrest but it wasn't clear if he was employed.

Attorney Ben Bollinger, who represented Duke during his trial, told The News Herald of Panama City that Duke was waiting in the woods for his wife with a rifle, wearing a mask and a bulletproof vest.

She confronted him and then tried to leave in a vehicle, and Duke shot the tires. He said that as part of his sentence, Duke was required to complete psychological counseling. Bollinger did not immediately return a phone message from the AP.

"The guy obviously had a death wish," district spokeswoman Karen Tucker said of Duke.

The Associated Press, NBC News and msnbc.com staff contributed to this report.

Video: In moment of crisis, heroes emerge

Transcript of: In moment of crisis, heroes emerge

BRIAN WILLIAMS, anchor:Now to a story that started to break late yesterday. It was a perfectly routine
school board
meeting in a
Florida
community. On the agenda, what

parents talk about in schools:head lice and new computers. Then a man rose to speak and nothing about him looked right. He was armed with a can of spray paint and an automatic handgun. But it's what happened next that was an extraordinary reaction by some people at this otherwise ordinary meeting. We should warn you, this videotape will be tough to watch for some, especially for young ones in the room. Our report tonight from
NBC
's
Mark Potter
in
Panama City
,
Florida
.

MARK POTTER reporting:When an ordinary
school board
meeting suddenly became terrifying, with a gunman threatening to kill...

Mr. CLAY DUKE:Leave! You may leave, you may leave.

Offscreen Voice #1:Dean, he told you to leave.

Mr. DUKE:The women can leave. Six men, stay.

POTTER:...ordinary public officials suddenly became heroes. Most dramatic was
board memberGinger Littleton
, who attacked the intruder with her purse.

Offscreen Voice #2:No. No,
Ginge
!
Ginger
, no.

Ms. GINGER LITTLETON (School Board Member):I knew at some point that things were going to turn out very badly, and they were going to turn out very badly for people whom I value and who are of great value to this community. And so I wasn't willing to just let nature take its course.

POTTER:Now
Littleton
and her purse are
the talk of the town
.

Mr. FRANKLIN HARRISON (School Board Attorney):I don't know about that
Ginger
woman, but I want her in my foxhole.

POTTER:Another hailed as a hero is Superintendent
Bill Husfelt
. When 56-year-old
Clay Duke
said he was angry his wife had been fired from teaching,
Husfelt
urged
Duke
to keep him as the lone hostage.

Mr. BILL HUSFELT:Let them go. I'm the one that did it. They don't sign the papers. I'm the only one that signs it. Will you let them go? He had that in his eyes, he was going to kill.
And I
just did not want him to kill all of us. Please don't.

POTTER:Soon, though, it all unraveled and
Duke
opened fire.

Mr. HUSFELT:Please. Oh.

Mr. DUKE:I'm going to kill....

POTTER:And that brought the biggest hero of all.

Mr. HUSFELT:I'm telling you,
Mike
saved our lives.

POTTER:Mike Jones
, the school security chief and former cop. He heard shots, burst into the room and wounded
Duke
, who then
took his own life
.

Ms. LITTLETON:His timing was impeccable. His aim was impeccable.

POTTER:As a result, and hard to believe, no one else in those desperate moments was even injured.
Mark Potter
, NBC News,
Panama City
,
Florida
.